Contributors

by David Anderson
' To move a survey gang of anything up to eighty boys, each carrying a regulation load of sixty pounds plus his own bedding, and get them a distance of thirty miles a day through a famine area calls for a certain amount of organisation. This was the problem that confronted me when I set out early in 1932 to build the. beacons on the Primary Chain of Triangulation between Bauchi and Yola in north-east Nigeria.'

in Wales
Introduced by John Barrett from Dale Fort Field Centre
Pembrokeshire
EMLYN EVANS talks about the great range and variety of ancient Welsh rocks and their attendant natural history
Peter PANTING outlines the opportunities available to him as the newly appointed Nature Conservancy naturalist at Tregaron Bog
EVAN ROBERTS shows how the success of upland farming is helped by naturalists' studies of the soil
BILL CONDRY introduces the chough, a bird at one time thought to be disappearing from Welsh cliffs and quarries
Produced by Jeffery Boswall

A series in which figures from novels and plays of the past are introduced by writers of today
John Lehmann presents
James Steerforth
From ' David Copperi. eld' by Charles Dickens
Steerforth played by Frank Duncan
Also taking part:
Denise Bryer , Richard George
John Glyn-Jones . Richard Hurndall Lockwood West , Marjorie Westbury
Production by Rayner Heppenstall

Contributors

For Children of Most Ages
' Granny's Wonderful Chair' by Frances Browne adapted as a serial play in six parts by Estelle Holt
6-Conclusion:
' The Story of Merrymind '
Produced by David Davis
5.30 For Older Children
' The Pilgrim's Progress '
From This World to That Which Is To Come
Delivered under the Similitude of a Dream by John Bunyan
Arranged in six episodes and told by David
6 —' Over the River '
' Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the Tree of Life; and may enter in through the Gates into the City.'

Contributors

Contributors

Christians think about their faith and its living expression
The Practical Christian
Ormerod Greenwood pays a tribute and puts some questions to the spirit of William Wilberforce
leader of the movement for the abolition of slavery
Illustrations provided by: John Broadbent. Wilfred Harrison Cyril Luckham , Daphne Oxenford
John Franklyn Robbins
Geoffrey Banks
Accompanist, Rayson Whalley

Appeal on behalf of the Family Planning Association by the Rt. Rev. Mervyn Stockwood, Bishop of Southwark
Contributions will be gratefully acknowledged and should be addressed to the Bishop of Southwark, [address removed]
The Family Planning Association is a voluntary organisation, founded in 1930. It has, at the' present time, 299 clinics where married people who wish to space their families receive medical advice, and where advice is also given to involuntarily childless couples.
In addition to the work of the clinics, the Association has set up and maintains Marriage Welfare Centres. At these centres practical help is given, on a wider scale than at the clinics, on many aspects of married life and parenthood -medical, socio-medical, and psychological-and there are also opportunities for training and research by doctors and others working in these fields. The Association is appealing especially for support to extend the work of these centres.

Contributors

by Anthony Trollope
Adapted for radio in twelve episodes by H. Oldfield Box
EPISODE 2
Characters in order of speaking:
Produced by David H. Godfrey
Against the known wishes of his patroness, the Dowager Lady Lufton (of Framley Court), Mark Robarts, the young vicar of Framley, is visiting Chaldicotes, the Barsetshire home of his worldly friend, Squire Sowerby, whose acquaintance Mark has made through that great friend of his school and college days, the young Lord Lufton.
But hardly has Mark arrived at Chaldicotes, than he has been persuaded by Sowerby into accepting a further invitation, and one which he knows must cause her ladyship still greater displeasure. And now he must write to Fanny, his wife, and tell her that his return is to be delayed by yet another week, and the sinister reason-that he is going to stay at Gatherum Castle, with the Duke of Omnium himself.

A gallery of portraits in close-up
Lotte Lehmann
The great opera and lieder singer, who gave up singing in 1951 and made a new career as a teacher, talks about her life and work to
Irene Slade
The conversation was recorded in Madame Lehmann's apartment during her recent visit to London.

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